Braised Pork Belly Bao Buns | Gua Bao
Christina Chow
A soft, pillowy, fluffy steamed bao buns that are filled with Chinese braised pork belly. Then topped with kimchi, pickled daikon, and fresh scallion.
Prep Time 1 hour hr
Cook Time 1 hour hr 15 minutes mins
Total Time 2 hours hrs 15 minutes mins
Course Appetizer
Cuisine Chinese, Taiwanese
Bamboo Steamer Tray
Dutch Oven
Parchment paper
Bao Bun
- 1.5 tsp active dry yeast
- ½ cup warm water
- 1.5 tbsp sugar
- 1.5 tbsp milk powder
- 1 ¼ cup flour
- 20 ml oil
Braised Pork Belly
- 1 tbsp oil
- 2 strips pork belly (skin off) cut into 3” pieces
- ¼ cup brown sugar
- ¼ cup soy sauce
- ¼ cup rice vinegar
- 2 tbsp dark soy sauce
- 2 star anise
- 1" ginger, cut into strips
- 2 cups water, adjust to cover the pork belly
- 2 bay leaves
Sriracha Mayo
- 2 tbsp mayo
- 2 tbsp Sriracha
Pickled Daikon
- 1/4 daikon, peeled and julienned
- 1/8 cup vinegar
- 1/8 cup sugar
- 1/4 tsp salt
Toppings
- 1 stalk scallion, cut into thin strips
- 1/8 cup kimchi
- 2-3 tbsp crushed peanuts
Bao Dough
In a small bowl, activate the yeast in warm water with sugar. Once it blooms combine into a large bowl with milk powder, flour, and oil.
Knead together until smooth, approximately 5-6 minutes. Put back into a bowl and cover in a warm spot to allow to proof for 1 hour.
Braised Pork Belly
Using a dutch oven, add in 1 tbsp of oil. Sear the pork belly pieces on each side for 30 seconds until slightly browned.
Add in brown sugar, soy sauce, rice vinegar, star anise, ginger, bay leaves, and ~2 cups of water or enough water to cover the pork belly.
Using an aluminium foil sheet, layer on top of the pork belly. Weigh the pork belly down with either clean fitted plates or a weighted object of your choice.
Once the liquid has boiled, cook on a low simmer for 1 hour until the pork belly is soft and tender. Remove from heat and allow to cool down slightly. Liquid should have reduced in half.
Shape the bao buns
After your dough has proofed up, roll onto a dusted surface into 1 cm thickness. Using a 3" cookie cutter or a mason jar lid, cut out circular pieces. Should be roughly 7-8 pieces.
Roll out the bao length wise into an oval shape. Brush with oil and fold in half. Layer onto cut out parchment paper squares.
Sear the pork belly
Once your pork belly has cooled, carefully slice into 1 cm thickness pieces.
Heat up a cooking pan, add in 1 tbsp of oil. Carefully layer the pork belly pieces, sear on each side for 1-2 minutes until slightly charred. Finish by drizzling some of the leftover pork belly braised sauce. Set aside.
Pickled Daikon
In a small bowl, combine sliced daikon, vinegar, sugar, and salt together. Set aside.
Keyword bao, bun, chinese, guabao, Taiwanese